Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Chicago
March 9, 2016
7:00pm - 9:00pm
Lower Level Conference Room, Adolphus Busch Hall
Hannah Arendt Lecture Series
About
For many readers, Hannah Arendt's The Human Conditon (1958) is, for better or worse, one of the founding texts of the post-Marxist turn to an austere, rarefied notion of "the political" detached from concrete social life, which celebrates "action" for its own sake while denigrating instrumental "work" and embodied "labor." This lecture, part of a revisionist interpretation of The Human Condition, reconsiders the meaning of Arendt's concept of labor; its significance in the structure of her work; its relation to her accounts of nature, necessity, and embodiment; and its connections to Arendt's critique of Marx, with whom she also had powerful and neglected affinities.